figen
Danish
[ˈfiːən]
noun
Definitions
- fig fruit
Etymology
Inherited from Old Danish fikæ inherited from Old Norse fíkja borrowed from Latin fīcus (fig tree, fig, fruit, fig fruit) derived from Old French figue borrowed from Old English fīc (fig, hemorrhoids, fig-tree, venereal ulcer, fig-disease).
Origin
Old English
fīc
Gloss
fig, hemorrhoids, fig-tree, venereal ulcer, fig-disease
Concept
Semantic Field
Food and drink
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- fico English
- ficus English
- fig English
- fig tree English
- fig-eater English
- figbird English
- figgery English
- figgle English
- figgy English
- figgy duff English
- figleaf English
- figless English
- figpecker English
- figwort English
- viikuna Finnish
- *fīca Latin
- ficus Latin
- fīca Latin
- fīcus Latin
- Feige German
- Feigenbaum German
- Feigenblatt German
- Feigenkaktus German
- Kaktusfeige German
- Ohrfeige German
- fico Italian
- ficus Dutch, Flemish
- figue French
- higo Spanish, Castilian
- fikon Swedish
- fictreow Old English
- fīc Old English
- fige Middle English
- figge Middle English
- fyke Middle English
- fíkja Old Norse
- figue Old French
- fíkja Icelandic
- figa Old High German
- fîga Old High German
- fīga Old High German
- фикус Bulgarian
- vīge Middle High German
- fik Albanian
- figo Old Portuguese
- vige Middle Low German
- hic Aromanian
- figu Asturian
- fîc Friulian
- figa Old Occitan
- figo Old Spanish
- ficu Sicilian
- fik Tok Pisin
- figue xno
- faica Dalmatian
- fikæ Old Danish
- 𐤐𐤂 Phoenician
- fik Chuukese